| Literature DB >> 15000396 |
Anke Becker1, Hélène Bergès, Elizaveta Krol, Claude Bruand, Silvia Rüberg, Delphine Capela, Emmanuelle Lauber, Eliane Meilhoc, Frédéric Ampe, Frans J de Bruijn, Joëlle Fourment, Anne Francez-Charlot, Daniel Kahn, Helge Küster, Carine Liebe, Alfred Pühler, Stefan Weidner, Jacques Batut.
Abstract
Sinorhizobium meliloti is an alpha-proteobacterium that alternates between a free-living phase in bulk soil or in the rhizosphere of plants and a symbiotic phase within the host plant cells, where the bacteria ultimately differentiate into nitrogen-fixing organelle-like cells, called bacteroids. As a step toward understanding the physiology of S. meliloti in its free-living and symbiotic forms and the transition between the two, gene expression profiles were determined under two sets of biological conditions: growth under oxic versus microoxic conditions, and in free-living versus symbiotic state. Data acquisition was based on both macro- and microarrays. Transcriptome profiles highlighted a profound modification of gene expression during bacteroid differentiation, with 16% of genes being altered. The data are consistent with an overall slow down of bacteroid metabolism during adaptation to symbiotic life and acquisition of nitrogen fixation capability. A large number of genes of unknown function, including potential regulators, that may play a role in symbiosis were identified. Transcriptome profiling in response to oxygen limitation indicated that up to 5% of the genes were oxygen regulated. However, the microoxic and bacteroid transcriptomes only partially overlap, implying that oxygen contributes to a limited extent to the control of symbiotic gene expression.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15000396 DOI: 10.1094/MPMI.2004.17.3.292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Plant Microbe Interact ISSN: 0894-0282 Impact factor: 4.171